Partial restoration of the microbiota of cesarean-born infants via vaginal microbial transfer

MG Dominguez-Bello, KM De Jesus-Laboy, N Shen… - Nature medicine, 2016 - nature.com
MG Dominguez-Bello, KM De Jesus-Laboy, N Shen, LM Cox, A Amir, A Gonzalez
Nature medicine, 2016nature.com
Exposure of newborns to the maternal vaginal microbiota is interrupted with cesarean
birthing. Babies delivered by cesarean section (C-section) acquire a microbiota that differs
from that of vaginally delivered infants, and C-section delivery has been associated with
increased risk for immune and metabolic disorders. Here we conducted a pilot study in
which infants delivered by C-section were exposed to maternal vaginal fluids at birth.
Similarly to vaginally delivered babies, the gut, oral and skin bacterial communities of these …
Abstract
Exposure of newborns to the maternal vaginal microbiota is interrupted with cesarean birthing. Babies delivered by cesarean section (C-section) acquire a microbiota that differs from that of vaginally delivered infants, and C-section delivery has been associated with increased risk for immune and metabolic disorders. Here we conducted a pilot study in which infants delivered by C-section were exposed to maternal vaginal fluids at birth. Similarly to vaginally delivered babies, the gut, oral and skin bacterial communities of these newborns during the first 30 d of life was enriched in vaginal bacteria—which were underrepresented in unexposed C-section–delivered infants—and the microbiome similarity to those of vaginally delivered infants was greater in oral and skin samples than in anal samples. Although the long-term health consequences of restoring the microbiota of C-section–delivered infants remain unclear, our results demonstrate that vaginal microbes can be partially restored at birth in C-section–delivered babies.
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